I visited Bristol this week and as I was walking through the zoo to the gorillas, I stopped at the meerkats. I was thinking critically about their enclosure, as ZooChat members do. I dislike the enclosure - it is small and sited beneath a large evergreen tree and so the environment is quite dark. But then I looked at the meerkats: they looked very well - in particular they were active and they were not overweight (as most zoo meerkats seem to be). Looking again at the enclosure, I could see that the tree provided shelter, but that the enclosure was open to the sun from the south and it has lots of glass, which shelters the meerkats from any wind and gives some 'greenhouse effect' for these notoriously warmth-loving creatures. The glass also lets the meerkats see the people, which they seem to like, so it may be almost as important as letting people see the meerkats. However I still wish it was significantly larger.
So my questions are, which zoo has the best meerkat enclosure and which zoo has the fittest meerkats?
It strikes me that this is quite a good test of a zoo. Virtually every zoo in the UK has meerkats and there is no reason why a large zoo should keep them better (or worse) than a small one. I'm going to make a special point of looking at the meerkats when I visit zoos this summer to try to work out my answers to these questions. I will be interested in other members' opinions.
Alan
So my questions are, which zoo has the best meerkat enclosure and which zoo has the fittest meerkats?
It strikes me that this is quite a good test of a zoo. Virtually every zoo in the UK has meerkats and there is no reason why a large zoo should keep them better (or worse) than a small one. I'm going to make a special point of looking at the meerkats when I visit zoos this summer to try to work out my answers to these questions. I will be interested in other members' opinions.
Alan